or A LIIRE MAN p; but of confidence h mm relations la conscience. hu- Covers Prince Edwardilsland Like the Dew Everybody Good mulls good manners, bcwnot so popular. MAXIMS “A _€\ Meal: MAN noble: than Guardian. Founded IE1. flugyloifetown Guardian. Two Cecile. iennan Civilians liisohey Crders WITH THE AMERICAN 1ST ARMY, Sept. l9 - (AP) - Al- mwgh pcarheads o1 the US. lst Anny an pointed through the Bdeg- med Line toward the heart of m, runnciand, thousands of Ger- clviliuns are rcmuining in mali- homes in direct disobedience to Nazi Party orders for evacuat- mnli; was the first crucial teat of Nazi authority over millions who have been forced to adhere to partv discipline, and Hitler has failed lli m The civilians were ordered und- gthrect of death as traitors to evacute the Cologne-Aachen area m advance of the American drive, but man/v are refusing to leave. There is no way to estimate just “my, percentage of the civil popu- lation is defying the order but- it is considerable and reflects passive bedlence nn a. large scale to mas authority. 80v. Dewey llas Second Close Call ABOARD DEWEY SPECIAL TRAlN-ENROUPE TO PORCPTJAND, Bepz. i9 — (AP) - Gov. Thomas E. Dewey’; special train ploughed into the rear of the regular north- qm ir train o, mile north of flatl1e Roe , Was, at 11:50 A. M. .?. W. .T today, injured several persons and severely shaking up Governor Dewey and Mrs. Dewey PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 19—tAP) ____- H, SPwKIIOLM, sept. i0 _- (II) — At least i4 Germans were killed 111 Copenhagen and other Danish cities today and was continuing fo- nisht after the Nazis in o. attempt Dania all government buildings, took over Police Stations in all towns and de- creed new death penalties. Violent fighting occurred when German Marines attempted ta storm Copenhagens Royal Palace and Danish Police resisted efforts of the Nazis to disarm them. Civilian; were reported to have Joined in the melee. A proclamation broadcast over the Nazi-controlled ‘Danish Radio said the Germans could no longer tolerate the communistic conditions now prevailing in the country, and they accused the Danish Police of creating this state cf affairs at a time when the occupation forces were fighting for their existence. Therefore, the broadcast said, Ger- man troops were directed to exer- else police supervision of the coun- tr Y. The broadcast declared the Dan- ish “criminals" had gained so much power that murder, sabotage and other crimes have for more than a year marked public life and "the gntiryn was approaching Bolshev- m_. to quell the rising tide of The occupation authorities P0111- ted to last week's 48 hour general striloa which was called to protest the transfer of all riboners in con- centration camps n Denmark to Germany. u. an example a! 111B growing influence of the Under- ground. Russo-Finnish Armistice Terms -Gov. Thomas E.dDcWc;y arrived in Portland late to oy te" a 63- mile drive through thea Uéilllllbl River Valley during which his car furniture truck. - The New York Governor, wompanicd by Mrs. Dewey, W115 proceeding tc Portland by auto-i mobile from Castle Rock, Wash, BC- where his special train plowed info another passenger train, when iiie car in which he was riding was forced to s\verve craziiy , to avoid colliding with the furni- ture truck. The truck, proceeding in the same direction, swung to the left off the highway without giving any signal. "Show — Eldon Friday. iJ-lil-Zi: "Show -- Murray River Thurs-r lIY- 9-19-21 llturday. "Chicken Suppu", St. Andrew's. hi1. 5i"pi€mbCl' ion. 940-11.; nation "we must try to build up our l future on what is left for us. We "Cillfkvll 41111191‘. New Glasscwl arc Russia's neighbor and must gl- llall. Sept. 2'1. y ii-zu-li ways mks this into account." Amiga, m Riverdaia ssoliool. (in r nu. PAC-k .. . _ ---- . May Soon Curtall Chicken Supper Kellys Cross, l-"Bdfly. Sept. 2i. Dance after»: yards. “Si. Columbia's Chicken Suuccrl ".14 B11120, ‘Tuesday, 5011101111331” lflh- S-ZO-iui French Rivcr l-lali,_ September 20th. ; 9-20-11. institute Diuicc. Lmvcr Mon- "Dance. Wednesmd y, C o o W barely escaped a collision with a. The Russo-Fdnnish armistice was ' signed in Moscow radio broadcast to the Finnish Peo- [I19 tonight acting Premier Baron Ernest Von Born described its terms as “the hardest in the Fin- nish history." mcdiately to the i940 border. Finland. “fairly large land and sea will be leased to the Soviet Unlvn for 50 years. ._______________ , , ii vest rn Flnl d will be placed,‘ oomfligu ,1(c11ip‘orari1y at tn? disposal of the‘ m ‘ Alli "Show — biurri-iy Harbor South,‘ Union an indemnity of $300,000- 9-20-1414 000 (American) y six years. ‘Hr-v lCivilian Defense There's a possibility that Canada‘ ziblislunent soon ma/v be curtailed and defence regulations relaxed, it IDNDON, Sept. 19 —- (OP) -- today and in a Ho said the terms included: i. Withdrawal by the Finns im- 2. Pcisamo will be relinquished by 3. The Porkkala Peninsula and a in street fighting which broke out quick National Resistance seized CITARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, scores/risen 2o, 1944f ALLIED F LANKIN G DRIVE GA Nazis Seek l To Quell Resistance In Denmark‘ ruin u» Flying Bombs Cn Yanks SUPREME The Germans in can troops in the Meus heldquarters disclosed tscnight: ___..____. Mayor Blanchard lleads Island Dental Ass'n Dr. J. E. Blanchard, Mayor of Charlottetown, was elected pres- ident of the P. E. I. Dental Asso. elation at its annual meeting held last night at the Charlottetown Hotel. Dr. A. A. Lockhart of Sum- mersfde was elected vice-President and Dr. Heath Maclntyre of Char- lottetown, Sec’y - Treasurer. Dr. J. A. MacMui-do, Summerside ls the retiring President. Council members: Dr. D. T. Way Charlottetown; Dr. L. A. Johnston, Montague. Dr. Donald W. Gullett of Toronto, ieflfelflfy of the Canadian Dental iation was the guest speaker at a dinner held in congunction with the meeting. He was ntroduced by also retiring president, Dr. McMur- Dr. Gullett gave a very inter- esting address on the work that ghsmgcanadian Dental Association is o Before coming to this province he attended a meeting of the Nova Scotia Dental Association at Kent- ville and also a. meeting of the New Brunswick Dental Association at Saint John. The speaker was tendered a hearty vote of thanksmovedby Dr. Waye and seconded by Dr. McIntyre. There was a good attendance at the meeting, about '75 per cent of the dentis:s in the province being present. Canuck Warship Aoted As Flagship For ll. S. Admiral area“ 4. Airdromes in southern and es. 6. The Finnish Army Will b9. placed on a peacetime footing. l 7. German forces in Finland will; be dirarmed. 8. Finland will pay the Soviet; over a period of The acting Premier told the OTTAWA. 56M. i9 — ( (P ) ivillan Defence Volunteers est- as learned today. Capt. V. S. B 511111 HEAD, QUARTERS, septa l9 -H(AP) __ I espera on have 111111911 fly-ng bombs onto Ameri. Valley, v v I War Situation Last Night By IIIKE Ii. EDISON (Associated Press War Analyst) Siegfried Line. Brnbant gateway to Berlin. rail connections between Berlin and the Low Countries. American blow: in the west, or is designed in part at least to force diversion of f‘ forces northward from tho American front. forces on the British right. densely populated portion of the country; is no such obstacle. slow its pace. separate air army into action in this theatre indicates the importanc to take advantage of the air home sweep, but until American pressur attack British armor apparently found meagre resistance and relativei little f‘ damage to communications, .forces moved must be utter confusion in German ranks. i ,______ j 8thf Army Advances Resamed In Rimini Newspaper Boy _ u... ...-. ..... A’. _.:.Lr i9 —iCP)—— Army of the Adriatic coast l9—1CP1- l-IB. Cowan, Jr., Chair- man of the National Newspapvruoy Committee of the Canadian Cir- culation Managers Association. to- fllvage righting was dfly made 151111111: the‘ text of o. letter around Rimini iilfflflifl wnei-e pin Se hasseutlonoremlers of all 51191;?‘ 901m 5011311113 only .100 yams a ’ nea 0' l5 ' "r m proclaim Saturday, Oct. '7, as a x nmmyueeks o“ Provincial Newspaperboy Day. The day has been set aside as e1- Natiuiuil Newspaperboy Day. said the letter, llifiliflll related with pride fell 0f Runini to the Alisa itiver, B. heavy tank-supported battle. Tiger tans turrcrs. to the Canadians after O/ITAWA, Sept. l9 — (GP) — For the first time in the records of‘ e Canadian Navy a Canadian warship- the Prince Henry-has,‘ acted as flagship for an American; admiral, Naval Service Headquart-y ers disclosed tonight in a press rc-. lease. 1 "t Ir; happened at Naples Aug. 6 when Rear Admiral T. E. Chandler whose family has been part of American Naval history for more, than 60 veers, boarded Prince Henry; to assume his duties a5 commander.’ of the task assault group which’ destroyed heavy gun cmplaccmenls‘ and radio location installations on the island; of Levant and Porti Cros to pave the way for the in- vasion of southern France. Admiral chandler, 49, Wag re- ceived aboard Prince Henry-Al mother ship to assault Godfrey of . C. His staff was assigned to cabin landingjPrime Minster Mackenzie craft-bv her commanding Off1C6l‘,i bark from the Quebec conference Victoria,‘ and the gRehabllliation meeting in Mongmgr the Dominion Cabinet, space with Canadian officers, com- lng today. pleting 3 liaison of the two navles which was to prove successful in the, and Thursday as operation, said the telease. After set 1c down to the handling or dam. the Admiral had been aboard a. few eslic business followin the job the more than 35,000 new - lLIlTBFDCLVS in the Dominion are do- O I I _- _Gen. Kesselring, must now decide 5 S N R I ‘ility have aided the war effort, ifho can hold the approaches to through selling, war savings Runinl or begin a bloody reircat stamps. canvassing for blood don. crs, investing in victory bonds and: 9y_ ill delivering the news to homes? Nine times the lst Nazi Para- tliroughoizt Canada every day and hev and other _vouih like them engaged in useful pursuits will time the Canrucks reformed and iilliifi the better world of to- smashed in again. WOPTOW. relentless jabbing. the crumbled and the shadow of great- er defeat hung over them. British destroyers sailed boldly up the coast to shell the Germans around San ‘Martino. and Dominion Cabinet Holds Meeting treat weight from aircraft houses 10 miles from the fr caused cmt to ereak and shake. OTTAWA. Scpt. 1a - (c?) with King Vice Regal Party Visits Maritimes HALIFAX. 569E. 19 —iCP)—H15 EXCCUCITCY. the Earl oi Athlonc. United Nations Relief and held a meet- Mcvlllllss will be held tomorrow the Ministers g B.‘ IIICBSUFG - “Mm, hours, no flag w... broken beside of pro-occupation with th 1 ll - and H" WW1 11181111655 11w M‘? H811. September 21st. Web- “S, §1§fim§§§°§§°,h§°§§§n,cr,0n the ship's commissioning pennant‘ ations for Canada of decls1on? ‘is; Pnnm“ Au“ 09mm um“ .N°"“ l"!!! Orchestra. 9-20-11. ,,‘,.obab1y Wm be made ‘ma. the in a brief cercmo y which was be- ched at the Churchill-Roosevelt 3mm W“ may Wm‘ F‘ “m "° —— l dvcninil. Victoria Hall, C ilefs of staff committee lieved "to have been without pre- conforcnce. The cabinet war com- the big R.C.A.F. station at East- 1 "p1 u’ a’ ern Passage. near Halif x. w...“ ma. s... a ..... ‘°:.c..i::a""""?."¥ m“ r2$f.tl.;i"*" we" e a” ‘.'.‘.‘...“§§..;it?° *5 ‘° m“ "l*-.'*=‘r2v'*“.a**"~d e --~ ' 1;" scam disarm. as: "Imumw mill"? m Mum“ ' I 4 l l 0 Lg? the questionfibeiltigvgdvatg to ‘from fir“ :31 Wnelilsmnlgi tikflfgk will“: -< a ‘ v ‘n TecC V6 [laugh b“m°mb°'l9_§o‘{‘1‘i-| n " “W111i! 1111B 1111911111011 of the gov- Nova Scotia’: lieutenant-Governor a ~__ " . . a a"';r.2:."z:*::r:l%s."“::"are": has... s“ ll Wnlnztoi-i: m nuD I B I S g °°"“9 ° '“ m s.........gf.Jo,1.§a';.E§j.l, rive n a tlc tates ~ c; gliyifgrlltgxg?’ or were mmsssailrrur: muss. in» mnonum.‘ mm m. _ d“ ‘ mm, Archgbayd Menu,’ “anew to ms Pauage. While in Hah- "Oeme one. coma all to the ghee in the Masonic Hall, Hunter Mm‘. today, Sept. 20. In aid of my. 9-29-11 a"5fllflst Hall, Friday, September 11d- Benefit Movie Picture for liiou B - _ om.- hlnch Soldiers Leggoéiwm. n i‘? ' “Ml Hail] 1116M’ 33nd. m“ a-nd- lunches. In aidyof - Ladies please bring lhmzcgigs. u _'—* 501th Hospital last dance of gm“ Wednesday, soot/ember 30th. hmbardler Alexander and Gunner ‘with 0i Grove Orchestra wlubllfy with Clifford's Orchestra. mums Orchestra playing best o dance music over ITESIICIB. m nrFlre sale of barley meal, meat l1» ground cats, hog and poul- m! concentrates deyhdrated alf- “11 meal available after Wednes- 1 11mm. sent. 2o, until sold. i200 In?! 0f usable feeds at half- rice. emotional Fox and An mals 11¢. Summerside Phone I442. g- 1'9 I . RI \l“li \i.’1 T may the Germans in the Baltic States has captured more the" 3-- 800 towns in Latvia and Bionic. :11 a four-day offensive in which one 2.’. ““°..‘iT"§t° ‘i122’... . van m through a dceP nil-Wm‘! M ""1 defence; south of Risa. New" an- nounced hi“ man radio first rePOYWd 1"‘ n!‘ dag, wats officially disclosed in Ill or cr o Stalin announcing Soviet ca ture today of valsa. BIWnllfl-L} ‘"3 bfiffiel‘ may. r-‘vltins the l" 1’ connection between forces in the north and Two hundred gee‘: 1:41:11‘ lvflgslennikov’: 0rd Bal- tic front army. l R. ssl ns Aus- l tilifeebyiveillr: latler ‘Illlfifllfll ' 5h and ext nd it to sogeewhat less than 2o miles- While LONDON. Sept. l0 —— (AP)— The Army in a new all-out drive to 5,3555%‘? The offensive. which the Gar- me day from Premier the enemy south. additional towns in this drive by 111;.- German Baltic armies were to ow strip alcn the open u n“ a wi th of Gcn. Blgramiank fli- mile-deep drive towards Hi a was most important junction in the Baltic states. was fought over difficult broken country in which swamps, wood- lands, hillocks and streams offer- ed great defensive advantages. the Russians were using at least 0S divisions in their total attempt to clear cut the Baltic States. inn front the Russians captured Timlsoara, 20 miles from the Yu o- sllv border and '78 miles east of Belgrade, Yugoslav capital. coming the battle for Warsaw, but the Polish capital continued un- dcr hca Re across t s formidable banter of the Vistula river, where the Ger- mans were reported to have nth- ered reinforcements. The succeslul battle for Volga The German radio asserted that hi‘ to the south on the Roman- ncr h- Ths Russians were silent con- Army artillery fire ant-governor of Saskatchewan since 1936, is understood to b9 gnxinug Q0 f x lih will inspect th l Jacobi-am... in ii’... “ésviefioi? General will take a harbor cruise the most spectacular, a vita piece be relieved 0f 111$ Nit for reasons on a of the Russian offensive pattern °1 Mami- 13, Qifizfiifl‘ mum, Wm was the victory at Valga. 111 Qllebm- 511' Ellie"! Pilot Will "main g me provrme my.“ o“- Eighty seven miles northeast of T911011 the end of his first five-year obei- s, visiting western Nova Riga. and e0 miles east of the Gulf term in Deeember- He is eniov-ns Scotla, them they will spend a of Riga. it is the meeting point of 800d health and likely will be asked week in New Brunswick before re. five Illportsnt railways and the 90 Q11l1fl11o,_1_n_g{!_l_¢;8- tumingjo on"... Always Readable "SALAIIK TEA 8: COFFEE flavour is the measure of satisfaction with Tea and Coffee. “Salads” gives the maximum yield in fine flavour. Driving to link up with airborne Allied forces in Eastern Holland, British armor is threatening to do more than turn the flank of the It is aiming ‘a deadly shaft at Berlin itself through the half open Mijmegcn-Arnhem gateway at the head of the Rhine Delia. Berlin radio admitted further Allied air landings in Eastern Hol- land with fighting in progress “north of the great rivers." The refer- ence apparently is to the Mans and tlio Rhine and their tributaries. Arnhem, gripped by airborne troops, is the northern portal of the Through that arcs run the direct road and It ls ton early yet to say definitely whether the Allied breakthrough 1 attempt at the head of the Rhine Delta is the main attack of the Angin- if. seems precisely aimed through the iilijmcgen-Arnhcm gateway to avoid both the Nazi flooded coastal urea: in Holland and the heavily con- gested Essen-Coiugne-Anehen trhngh flat flees American lst Army Tim: highly industrial lower Rhine area. of Gcnnany ls the most Farther north, however, where the Allied air army now is operating with a fast-paced British follow-up around the southern portal of the Brubant gateway. there A break-through there. once the Rhine is left lic- hind, would encounter no further water barriers of consequence to The fact that Gen. Eisenhower has thrown his carefully conserved hs attaches lo the move. It may prove that It was withheld not only until the British ground forces in western Holland were in a position along the rest of the front had occupied all available German reserves. It is significant. at least, that In following through on the airborne That indicates that the Nazi High Command was caught off guard. If that is not the case, the only answer to the speed with which British ROME, Sept. Brit- ish and Canadian troops of tin.- mu W. svelte jfllilllmeflllk‘ steadily lo- and there locked with uie Germans in rosin: noruriem edge of the field was coking out Germans in embedd- West of the airfield, San Martino four days oi relentless combat and tile Nazi commander, -I"ie;ci Marshall across the flatiands of the Po Vall- T°““”' ‘flit; More Talk ti ' crunch of bonnbs being dropped 8 PAGES min. | end of the Siegfried Line, has in Holland and now is fighting patches said idle ionighi. Reports received from the front by on the southern banks o Reuier News Nijmegen, forging ll- a solid link with LL-Gen. H. l3reret0n’s to cap a 5U-BTI1E drive in the last 48 hours. Eindhoven, seventh city of ‘he Netherlands, was captured by Lhc JQIXTL action of the British 2nd Ar- my and the airborne troops, who 118d doggedly held open a gateway between Nijmegen and Arnhem 1o ,aid tlicmnin thrust toward Ger- fmnnys ndustrlnl Ruhr Valley. - By completing the new junction, i tire British 2nd Ai'my now was four miles from Germany on the sou- thern bank; of (he Waal Rhine. e With official Allied Cflfiillllliliibn that LL-Gcn. Lewis H. Brcrci-on's airborne forces were fighting in the Arnliem-Nijmegen sector time German rlcfcxiccs along the lower Rhine jllrueared to have been neutralized. Allied paro- Positions In e Montgomery Says German Defeat Sure This Year Y . At Nijmegen mo. ohu-te troops and airborne infantry ‘\l\l'€l‘l!b:bO-litr121éf!1i1e5 nciithwest hof “"“" ic wn o eve, W1 _ v been authoritatively descrcibled i? LONDON Sflll- l9 — (C91 — the northern terminus of the Seag- iried line. Uprooting of the enemy's right flank and a qucnt Allied plunge into the Cer- man industrial Rhineland appear- ed to be imminent. Throughout rhe day great trains nir transports and gliders pour- eri Allied reinforcements and suDD- lies into the Elixdhaveil area and into the big pocket held by air- borne forces between Arnhem and Field Marshal Montgomery, who is in over-all command of the ground and airborne armies on the northern front, told his troops in Belgium today without qualification that the war against the Germans would be ended this year. “Before We started this busi- ness I gave if. as my opinion that if we did our stuff we could have the war against the Germans ""“"""""' . . . . . Nlkneeen Netherlands towns 30 , waia lillflllli. ens ein uooiway to ,1 c ' ~ v Day sllggfl$tfid lhe Po Valley and” anchor or the f,§§.‘,n“° “m” “mhmt °f Emd‘ m?‘ tilslsngsvarfliehinisgiiife of Sop- zvyigltiézrzl] oi Kcssclrlngs CrICXlCC, ‘ - {ember Km‘ l twin “twin, r -—— I A ‘F; f . 5 . New landings Reported ° 5a i! 5 a ""9" l l - Prrranaoaouon. one. sect. D0713‘ ‘i311’; cliffs‘. ngiuesslfsgutlaaesf‘ "“"°1Y "gm- The" ‘e '1" Additional allied landinzs in the doubt about l1- Nctherlands were reported by the . d» pa, go My; .31‘: ixsazzsrna; “m: "a: eon ma e n Drov nces o _ Utrecht and Geldeerland, immexii- the remnants of ‘he German army. "I would say there is no point ln rushing straightaway to Ber- lin today or this wee If you first defeat the Germans or col- them in as prisoners you will make the Job easy." _ ntelv north and northeast of Arn- e hem and Nljmegen. Nazi broad- casirrs repeatedly stressed the enormous numbers of troops and the quantities __of __suuvilles€_s_._n_zifi A (Continued l... s}... v, calvin- Junctions Are Bombed chute Division di'OVG_ the Canud- ___ g_ inns out of San Mzwtlno, but each '~'*~*"" "i “"w 3y Ernest Agnew LONDON, Sept. l9 —- (AP) ._. ‘Five strategic German rail junct- ions through which the enemy must -'funnel troops and material to the front were blasted today in some o1!‘ the heaviest daylight raids of - e war, l Marshalling yards at Riurun and‘ Soest, two key Junctions. were at- LONDOM Sept 19 _ Talk o; .‘ tacked by 7_00 to 750 American heavy ‘German 5cm.” weapon ‘vmch thhbombers w.th equal fighter escort, leucmy hopes might turn the ride of. and 13 111189 {Q1119 0f medium b0111- ibnitle continue to come out of Eu-l 11ers struck heavllv at the rail yards ‘rope. One of the latest quotes Ger- at I-hvhweller. Duran and Merzen- iman prisoners captured 5n fiance ich on the Cologne-Aachen railway. as declaring they were told five, All the yards were lflmlned Willi idays ago that they needed to hold} "@1811! CBYS- Large fires, some of yo,“ only 10 more days um“ Hitler-s which shot flames hundreds of Werrible new secret “v” wQQpQn; feet high, were reported by the would be turned against the allies. i 119ml)" Clews- W110 Baffled 011i ‘hi’ The prlsoncrs were mken in fierceimlsSlOn :n good weather. They said fighting east of Nancy where thei the yflfdfi Were reduced to Wreck- Nazls were countcr-atzackin dgsraflv- an“; 3rd army forces with; fan- The full-scale daylight operation: atical zeal A front dispatch isaid followed l! 8"?“ Mmldl)’ 1118M NOW the German high command Wagby "I R- A- F- Bkfllnli- B11111"- throwing men and tanks away reck- | haven, important North Sea German 19551,. . port of shelter for pro-war liners Today’ mo, the P3115 newgpgpgf|flnd for torpedo boats and other Parisien Libre reported from Arrasl naval aircraft. In 20 minutes big that gel-mans had mm peasants Lancasters dropped more than 420.- in that vicinity that their huge incendiary bombs bn the port in and mysterious installation near glint desolrébed as the wars Written, destroyed by Allied bombs, 18895 1e rfl - , was intended lc house a secret wea- ' pon which would demolish London. Five thousand workers toiled for months in building th’s installation despite some of the most intensive bombing of the war. The Germans claimed, the newspaper said, ihat it airs? was i0 lhlouse “death-n raly" mac nes cnpa e of s opp g ar- plane engines. The Wntten installation was first f 0f German l Secret Weapon ilevr Regulation , lie Discharge of 1 Canadian Forces revealed by the construction of a mysterious tgwftigdThig tvlitiii a gecret target for n Saes eavy OTTAWA s , m _ (CB, __ based in England through- Members cf‘ Caiigdifs armed forces will not be discharged in future until it has been proved that they are not suffering from any com- municable venereal diseases, a, routine army order disclosed to-I d ny all The Allied planes blasted the spot so thoroughly in 33 subsequent raids that the resulting destruction astounded army troops who first saw it after the nrea was captured from the Germans. NOT T0 BE CONFUSED LONDON ~ (c?) - An English, The order said that men must undergo a blood test before discharge. If it is found that they are suffering from a venereal dis-| tl ir dis liarg will be de-, court has ruled that a cockerei; fsfigd 315ml hgfltmcem has mnde. is not poultry: Tho ruling was made tho,“ non_lnfectyous_ 1 when n woman with 25 hens and, four cockerels was charged with‘ contrnveninz an order that eggs mnv bc 501d i0 an unregistered customer only when "not more than 25 head of poultry are kept." Military officials said the order‘ applied to three services and was passed for ilie benefit of erson- nel and the wives and amilies they will be returning to. El."- ‘.4-°9= ° ‘seys forces hzid reached the last large puc kct of the airborne army on the edge {ion was made first in the vicinity 0f Eind hoven Monday _ Gen. Dempsey’s swift armored units advanced more than 37 miles during the day Enemy Troops Cling To thar Provinces a can. use. Delivered. $5.00. iN S SPEED LONDON, Sept. l9 — (AP)—The British 2nd Army, racing to flank the northern completed a new junction with Allied airborne troops f the Wadi Rhine, field dis- Agency said LL-Gen. Damp!- o sky troops with whom a un- ~_.:n Boulogne l By WILLIAM STEWART WITH THE 1ST CANADIAN ARMY, Sept. 19 - (OP Cable»- German forces still clung grimly tonight to parts of the south- western section of Bculogne while Canadian and German artillery duelled from commandin heights. Ontario troops met stu born ro- sistance as they fought deeper into the southwestern district of the Channel Port while Canadian shock troops were encircling this district and mopping up remnant: of enemy forces in the strong hill defences on the north and north- east outskirts. From dominating Mont Lair.- bert and other heights Canadian gunners are able to observe most of the positions still in enemy hands and bring down tremend- ous artlllery fire on them. Thu Germans nold good observations points from their remaining hill positions, behind which are con- crete defences. They lre main- taining a hail of shcllfire on roads leading into Boulogne. Although the Germans holding that part of the rt lying southwest of the River 111°... and the harbor area, Ontario in- fantrymen have gained a foot- hold in this region. Since all-out attack on Boillogng was launched Sunday the Canadian; have 111K911 2.000 prisoners. _i_____ Highland Division lfl ‘icsln Under Canadians Til 1ST CANADIAN —(CP Cabin-Thu Ame h gcmvflfgkgfio! rmy as en iéi a British formation under l‘: anadian Aimy Command. it could be reported today The Highlanders participated in the capture of Le Ravi-c and its big Bu-rriaon and earlier took St Val- cry where the division suffered heavy losses during the i940 Battle of France. _ r A sfmlimr. Pnsorrntrfv. is A Coco Amt: Esrscratu 1o A Btu. PLAYER.’ High tide this ilfufiluff-l at 1.41 and txxnnrrow morning at 1.4V. Sun sets this evening at '1 02 and rises tomorrow morning at 0.44. First quarter 5th. 901 A M. summer-side tide eighteen minul ter than Charlottetown. DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown — Buzumcrlllc - Monsoon Leave Charlottetown ‘I uni 11.30 mun; D p.m. Arrive Charlottetown 1M6 on. 5.45 p.m., I. p.111. 8 UNDA Y IIIYICI Luvs Charlottetown l! noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 p.11. Charlottetown - New Glasgow (Dally except Sunday, [cave Charlottetown i pm. Arrive Charlottetown 6.50 pun. l}. l.—i\i. B. FERRY SERVICI DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS Leave Wood lsinnilc-‘TM A. M [L00 A. M. 3.00 P. . Leaver Caribou — 0.00 A. I. 1.0! P. M. 8.00 P. I.